Nearly 55 million face hunger in West and Central Africa, UN warns
Al Jazeera
UN agencies say double-digit inflation and stagnating local production are major drivers of the hunger crisis.
Nearly 55 million people will struggle to feed themselves in the coming months in West and Central Africa as soaring prices have fuelled a food crisis, United Nations agencies have warned.
In a joint statement on Friday, the World Food Programme (WFP), the UN children’s agency UNICEF, and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said that the number facing hunger during the June-August lean season had quadrupled over the last five years.
It said economic challenges such as double-digit inflation and stagnating local production had become major drivers of the crisis, beyond recurrent conflicts in the region.
And it noted that Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Mali would be among the worst affected.
The UN agencies said the prices of major staple grains had continued to rise across the region from 10 percent to more than 100 percent compared with the five-year average.